Skip to product information
1 of 1
Regular price £20.69 GBP
Regular price £22.99 GBP Sale price £20.69 GBP
Sale Sold out
Free UK Shipping

Freshly Printed - allow 4 days lead

Fighting the First Wave
Why the Coronavirus Was Tackled So Differently Across the Globe

Why did the world's nations fight the Covid-19 pandemic in such different ways and with such varying results?

Peter Baldwin (Author)

9781316518335, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 18 March 2021

392 pages
23.5 x 15.9 x 2.6 cm, 0.71 kg

'Commendably, this well-written book is accessible to all audiences … The detailed index and Baldwin's extensive notes are of particular value. This will be a welcome text for use in university public health and history programs as well as an informative resource for general readers … Highly recommended R. A. Logan, Choice

COVID-19 is the biggest public health and economic disaster of our time. It has posed the same threat across the globe, yet countries have responded very differently and some have clearly fared much better than others. Peter Baldwin uncovers the reasons why in this definitive account of the global politics of pandemic. He shows that how nations responded depended above all on the political tools available - how firmly could the authorities order citizens' lives and how willingly would they be obeyed? In Asia, nations quarantined the infected and their contacts. In the Americas and Europe they shut down their economies, hoping to squelch the virus's spread. Others, above all Sweden, responded with a light touch, putting their faith in social consensus over coercion. Whether citizens would follow their leaders' requests and how soon they would tire of their demands were crucial to hopes of taming the pandemic.

Introduction: One Threat, Many Responses
1. Science, Politics, and History: Do They Explain the Variety of Approaches to Covid-19?
2. New Dogs, Old Tricks: Fighting Covid-19 with Ancient Preventive Tactics
3. The Politics of Prevention: How State and Citizen Interacted, Battling the Virus
4. What Was Done? Act One of the Pandemic
5. Why the Preventive Playing Field Was Not Level: Geography, Prosperity, Society
6. Where and Why Science Mattered: Traditional Chinese Medicine, Herd Immunity, Asymptomatic Carriers, Superspreading, and Masks
7. From State to Citizen: The Individualization of Public Health
8. Who is Responsible for Our Health? How Prevention was Enforced
9. Difficult Decisions in Hard Times: Trade-offs between Being Safe and Solvent
Conclusion: Public Health and Public Goods: The State in a Post-Pandemic World
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index.

Subject Areas: Public health & preventive medicine [MBN], Economic & financial crises & disasters [KCX], Political economy [KCP], Employment & unemployment [KCFM], Geopolitics [JPSL], Public administration [JPP], Comparative politics [JPB], Society & culture: general [JF]

View full details